Standard & Poor s Ratings Services Credit Ratings, Research & Analytics

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Standard & Poor s Ratings Services Credit Ratings, Research & Analytics Providing Valued Research and Opinions for Market Participants As part of the world s financial infrastructure, Standard & Poor s Ratings Services plays a vital role in bringing transparency and comparability to the financial markets, helping investors and others measure and mitigate credit risk. Credit ratings foster the development and smooth functioning of capital markets, which help people start and grow businesses, cities and states build highways and hospitals, and manufacturers build factories and create jobs. Standard & Poor s Ratings regularly updates and refines its processes to align with new developments in the marketplace. To incorporate the changing needs of investors, issuers, and markets, Standard & Poor s Ratings has invested in systems, analytics, and training and continually assesses its ratings methodologies, adopting changes as needed. www.standardandpoors.com Standard & Poor s Ratings Services rates more than $47 trillion* of global debt and has approximately 1.2 million ratings outstanding * Data as of 12/31/2014 10 McGraw Hill How Standard & Poor s Ratings Services Generates Revenue Ratings for new issuance of corporate, government, and structured finance debt instruments; bank loan ratings; and corporate credit estimates (transaction revenue) Surveillance of a credit rating, annual fees for customer relationship-based pricing programs, and fees for entity credit ratings and ancillary services (e.g., Rating Evaluation Services) (non-transaction revenue) Changing Revenue Mix (2007 vs. 2014): Corporate Ratings are Now a Larger Portion of the Business (dollars in millions) $2,138 27% 15% 9% 44% $2,455 51% 17% 9% 12% 6% 11% 2007 2014 Corporates Institutions Governments Structured Finance CRISIL, Other (1) (1) Other includes intersegment royalty, Taiwan Ratings Corporation, and adjustments Revenue: Non-Transaction/Transaction (dollars in millions) $2,800 2,100 1,400 700 56% 44% 54% 46% 12 13 54% 46% 14 Non-Transaction $1,131 $1,239 $1,326 Transaction 903 1,035 1,129 Total Revenue $2,034 $2,274 $2,455 Revenue: Domestic/International (dollars in millions) $2,800 2,100 1,400 700 54% 46% 12 53% 47% 53% 47% 13 14 Domestic $1,102 $1,214 $1,305 International 932 1,060 1,150 Total Revenue $2,034 $2,274 $2,455 Note: Segment revenues do not include intersegment revenue elimination

Spanning 26 countries, Standard & Poor s Ratings Services is a leading provider of credit ratings, research, and analytics. Standard & Poor s analysts offer a combination of global perspective and local insight. STANDARD & POOR S RATINGS SERVICES Standard & Poor s Global Footprint Standard & Poor s continued its leadership on the issue of financing global infrastructure in 2014, publishing 36 reports across all regions; convening events in Brussels, London, Washington, D.C., and New York; and having thought leaders speak at a variety of conferences around the world. It also focused on the financial risks of climate change, publishing 19 articles, holding events on the topic, and participating in the U.N. Climate Summit. Standard & Poor s acquired BRC Investor Services, S.A., a leading provider of credit ratings based in Bogotá, Colombia Broad and Deep Analytical Coverage Standard & Poor s Ratings Services ratings are tools to evaluate credit risk, expressing opinions about the relative likelihood that debt issued by companies and governments will be repaid on time and in full. Its ratings reflect in-depth analysis of the issuers and their debt obligations. Corporate Ratings Institution Ratings Insurance Company Ratings Government Security Ratings Structured Finance Ratings 53,000 61,000 6,800 970,200 85,200 Industrials Utilities Project Finance Banks Broker/Dealers Finance Companies Other Institutions Health Life Property/ Casualty Reinsurance/ Specialty Bond International Public Finance U.S. Public Finance Sovereigns Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Asset-Backed Securities Collateralized Debt Obligations Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities Servicer Evaluations The successful 2014 China Credit Spotlight series included reports on China s Top 150 Corporates, China s Top 50 Banks, and China s Top 25 Insurers. S&P hosted live webcasts and media briefings, and published a special edition of CreditWeek Standard & Poor s Standard & Poor s affiliate Standard & Poor s was named Best Rating Agency at The International Takaful Awards 2014 Globally, Standard & Poor s rated more than $4.3 trillion in new debt in 2014 2015 Investor Fact Book 11

CRISIL Limited A Standard & Poor s Company CRISIL is a global analytical company that provides ratings, research, and risk and policy advisory services to a globally diversified client base. McGraw Hill has a 68% majority ownership in CRISIL. As India s leading ratings agency and provider of highend research to the world s largest banks and leading corporations, CRISIL empowers its customers, and the markets at large, with independent analysis, benchmarks, and tools. CRISIL enables markets and market participants to become more transparent and efficient by enabling them to mitigate and manage risk, make pricing decisions, generate more revenue, reduce time to market, and enhance returns CRISIL helps lenders and borrowers, issuers and investors, regulators, governments, and market intermediaries make better-informed investment and business decisions www.crisil.com Ratings India Ratings Bond Ratings Bank Loan Ratings SME Ratings Real Estate Star Ratings CRISIL: Revenue Mix (percentage of revenue) Global Analytical Centre Global Analytical Centre supports Standard & Poor s Ratings Services by providing back-end support services for financial data analysis, processing information, improving workflow efficiencies, and performing modeling assignments Ratings Services Research Services Advisory Services CRISIL: A Global Analytical Company Research India Research Economy & Industry Research Funds & Fixed Income Research Equity & Company Research Global Research & Analytics Research Risk & Analytics Corporate Research Coalition Development 90% of India s commercial banks use CRISIL s industry research for credit decisions CRISIL: Revenue by Segment Ratings Services Research Services Advisory Services 12 Advisory 13 14 CRISIL Infrastructure Advisory Advisor to governments, multilateral agencies, large public and private sector firms, and investors CRISIL Risk Solutions Provider of a comprehensive range of risk management tools, analytics, and solutions to financial institutions, banks, and corporations Infrastructure Advisory provides practical and innovative solutions to governments, donor-funded agencies, and the private sector in more than 20 countries Risk Solutions has a client base of 75+ banks and financial institutions CRISIL is the largest provider of valuation of fixed-income securities to the Indian mutual fund, insurance, and banking industries, valuing nearly Rs. 81 trillion (U.S. $1.3 trillion)* of Indian debt securities * Data as of 5/31/2015 12 McGraw Hill

Standard & Poor s Ratings Services Track Record: Meeting the Test of Time Standard & Poor s Ratings Services What is a Standard & Poor s credit rating? Credit ratings are opinions about credit risk. Standard & Poor s ratings express an independent opinion about the ability and willingness of an issuer to meet its financial obligations in full and on time. Credit ratings can also speak to the credit quality of an individual debt issue and the relative likelihood that the issue may default. How Standard & Poor s ratings perform: Global Corporate Average Cumulative Default Rates (1981 2014) (%) (a) Time horizon (years) Rating 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 AAA 0.03 0.14 0.24 0.36 0.47 0.53 0.61 0.67 0.74 0.77 0.80 0.84 0.91 0.98 AA 0.02 0.07 0.13 0.24 0.35 0.46 0.56 0.65 0.73 0.82 0.90 0.97 1.05 1.12 1.19 A 0.07 0.16 0.27 0.41 0.57 0.75 0.95 1.13 1.32 1.51 1.69 1.84 2.00 2.15 2.32 BBB 0.20 0.57 0.96 1.46 1.95 2.43 2.84 3.26 3.66 4.06 4.49 4.84 5.17 5.50 5.84 BB 0.76 2.35 4.23 6.06 7.71 9.28 10.59 11.75 12.80 13.74 14.52 15.18 15.75 16.24 16.77 B 3.88 8.80 12.97 16.22 18.70 20.72 22.37 23.69 24.82 25.91 26.82 27.57 28.26 28.88 29.49 CCC/C 26.38 35.58 40.67 43.77 46.28 47.24 48.27 49.06 50.03 50.73 51.28 51.94 52.72 53.38 53.38 Investment-grade 0.11 0.29 0.50 0.76 1.03 1.29 1.54 1.78 2.01 2.24 2.46 2.65 2.83 3.01 3.20 Speculative-grade 3.87 7.58 10.79 13.39 15.49 17.23 18.69 19.90 20.98 21.97 22.79 23.49 24.13 24.68 25.22 All rated 1.50 2.95 4.23 5.31 6.20 6.97 7.62 8.18 8.68 9.15 9.56 9.90 10.21 10.49 10.78 Source: Standard & Poor s Default, Transition, and Recovery: 2014 Annual Global Corporate Default Study and Rating Transitions, April 30, 2015 Global Structured Finance Cumulative Default Rates, Conditional On Survival (1976 2014) (%) (b) The tables to the right show the default rates experienced for each rating category. For example: The 5-year cumulative default rate for corporate bonds rated AAA has been 0.36%, or fewer than four defaults for every 1,000 ratings. The 5-year cumulative default rate for AAA-rated structured finance issues has been 2.68%. Time horizon (years) Rating 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 AAA 0.09 0.43 1.01 1.82 2.68 3.40 3.87 4.15 4.33 4.41 AA 0.28 2.36 5.72 8.84 11.57 13.77 15.26 16.13 16.65 16.96 A 0.53 3.74 8.07 11.78 15.06 17.86 19.93 21.37 22.32 22.95 BBB 1.24 6.66 13.10 18.89 24.00 28.16 31.24 33.54 35.19 36.34 BB 2.73 11.10 18.90 26.50 32.74 37.85 41.75 44.73 47.23 49.21 B 6.52 18.56 28.82 39.33 47.86 53.43 57.87 61.22 63.89 65.62 CCC/C 31.66 49.94 62.95 70.43 74.42 76.45 78.36 80.05 81.01 81.32 Investment-grade 0.47 2.86 6.08 9.03 11.66 13.82 15.33 16.35 17.01 17.41 Speculative-grade 17.77 31.60 42.07 49.88 55.37 59.19 62.20 64.52 66.39 67.75 All rated 5.35 10.83 15.84 19.84 22.95 25.29 26.95 28.12 28.94 29.47 Source: Standard & Poor s Default, Transition, and Recovery: 2014 Annual Global Structured Finance Default Study and Ratings Transitions, June 22, 2015 (a) Average cumulative default rates are derived by calculating conditional on survival marginal default rates from experiences of each static pool and time horizon (b) AAA ratings from the same transaction are treated as a single rating in the calculation of this table 2015 Investor Fact Book 13

Global Corporate Debt Maturities through 2019 Annual Estimate Published by Standard & Poor s Global Fixed Income Research Standard & Poor s Ratings Services estimates that nearly $9 trillion in global corporate debt is scheduled to mature between 2015 and year-end 2019 (see table at right). About $1.6 trillion of this amount is due in 2015. In 2016, the amount coming due is approximately $1.8 trillion. Nearly $1.9 trillion is due in 2017 and about $1.7 trillion in 2018. Approximately $1.9 trillion is due to mature in 2019. Entities domiciled in Europe account for about 41% of the $9 trillion total. U.S.-based entities account for 42%, entities based in other developed countries (Australia, Canada, Japan, and New Zealand) account for about 11%, and entities based in the emerging markets account for just over 6%. Global Corporate Debt Maturities by Rating (2015 2019) (dollars in billions) $2,000 1,500 AAA AA A Investment Grade 1,000 500 BBB BB B CCC Speculative Grade 15 16 17 18 19 Total Investment Grade $ 1,435 $ 1,475 $ 1,517 $ 1,185 $ 1,250 Total Speculative Grade 175 278 377 529 659 Total Global $ 1,610 $ 1,753 $ 1,894 $ 1,714 $ 1,908 Global Corporate Debt Maturing through 2019: $8.9 trillion Global Corporate Debt Maturing by Region (2015 2019) (dollars in billions) Investment Grade: 77% $6.9 trillion United States: 42% $3,700 Speculative Grade: 23% $2.0 trillion $8.9 trillion Europe: 41% $3,631 Other Developed Markets: 11% $969 Emerging Markets: 6% $578 Approximately $9 trillion* in rated global corporate debt is coming due between 2015 and the end of 2019 * Data as of 12/31/2014 Notes for pages 14 and 15: Data as of December 31, 2014. Includes bonds, loans, and revolving credit facilities. Estimates are likely biased on the high side because tallies do not always take into account amortization schedules and loan paydowns. Additionally, revolving credit facilities are usually tallied at full value whether or not they are fully drawn. Foreign currencies are converted to U.S. dollars at the exchange rate on close of business on December 31, 2014. Details may not sum to total due to rounding Source: Standard & Poor s Global Fixed Income Research 14 McGraw Hill

Standard & Poor s Ratings Services Global Corporate Debt Maturities by Year (2015 2019) (dollars in billions) 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Total United States Investment grade $ 235 $ 242 $ 264 $ 195 $ 181 $ 1,116 Speculative grade 16 17 30 25 31 120 Investment grade 167 263 305 290 333 1,358 Speculative grade 86 132 193 312 383 1,106 Total United States $ 503 $ 653 $ 793 $ 822 $ 928 $ 3,700 Europe Investment grade $ 526 $ 450 $ 417 $ 269 $ 242 $ 1,904 Speculative grade 17 18 19 24 18 96 Investment grade 226 243 236 213 258 1,176 Speculative grade 34 72 80 111 159 456 Total Europe $ 803 $ 783 $ 753 $ 616 $ 677 $ 3,631 Other Developed Markets Investment grade $ 131 $ 122 $ 119 $ 68 $ 81 $ 521 Speculative grade 1 1 Investment grade 70 67 68 58 62 325 Speculative grade 8 21 20 34 39 121 Total Other Developed Markets $ 209 $ 210 $ 207 $ 161 $ 182 $ 969 Emerging Markets Investment grade $ 36 $ 38 $ 42 $ 32 $ 27 $ 174 Speculative grade 3 6 5 5 4 22 Investment grade 45 50 65 61 66 286 Speculative grade 11 13 28 18 26 96 Total Emerging Markets $ 94 $ 107 $ 141 $ 115 $ 122 $ 578 United States: $3,700 billion Europe: $3,631 billion Investment Grade: 30% $1,116 billion Speculative Grade: 3% $120 billion Investment Grade: 37% $1,358 billion Speculative Grade: 30% $1,106 billion Investment Grade: 52% $1,904 billion Speculative Grade: 3% $96 billion Investment Grade: 32% $1,176 billion Speculative Grade: 13% $456 billion Other Developed Markets: $969 billion Investment Grade: 54% $521 billion Speculative Grade: 0% $1 billion Investment Grade: 34% $325 billion Speculative Grade: 12% $121 billion Emerging Markets: $578 billion Investment Grade: 30% $174 billion Speculative Grade: 4% $22 billion Investment Grade: 49% $286 billion Speculative Grade: 17% $96 billion Note: Details may not sum to total due to rounding 2015 Investor Fact Book 15

Global Debt Markets: Dollar Volume by New-Issue Category U.S. Debt Market In 2014, Standard & Poor s rated approximately 84% of the $1.8 trillion of addressable debt issued in the U.S. market compared to 88% of the addressable market in 2013. Rated debt issuance by dollar volume in the U.S. rose approximately 5% from 2013 to 2014, while the number of issues decreased by approximately 3%. The rated debt market is a component of the total debt market and includes only the debt securities issued with a rating. The rated U.S. debt market is primarily comprised of six new-issue categories (shown below): (1) Corporates (Industrials and Services); (2) Municipals; (3) Sovereigns; (4) Mortgage-Backed Securities (Residential and Commercial); (5) Asset-Backed Securities; and (6) Collateralized Debt Obligations. (a, b, c, d, e) Rated U.S. Debt Market $2,000 1,500 1,000 500 94% 90% 88% 89% 88% 84% S&P Rated Volume $1,479 $1,279 $1,096 $1,500 $1,524 $1,536 Rated Volume $1,568 $1,428 $1,247 $1,677 $1,729 $1,818 # of Rated Issues 11,783 14,427 10,659 12,987 11,141 10,851 Sources: Thomson Reuters, Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor's Rated U.S. Debt Market: (a, b, c, d, e) 2014 Dollar Volume by New-Issue Category U.S. Corporates: Industrials (c) Corporates: Industrials $ 607 Corporates: Services $ 387 Municipals $ 326 $700 525 350 175 99% 97% 98% 99% 99% 97% $1.8 trillion Sovereigns $ 37 RMBS $ 30 CMBS $ 89 S&P Rated Volume $508 $445 $465 $616 $641 $587 Rated Volume $515 $458 $474 $621 $650 $607 # of Rated Issues 706 708 652 819 802 646 Sources: Thomson Reuters, Standard & Poor s See footnotes on page 17 Notes: Annual figures; dollar volume in billions; data by domicile of issuer/assets Details may not sum to total due to rounding 16 McGraw Hill ABS $ 208 CDOs $ 133 Total $ 1,818 U.S. Corporates: Services (c) $500 375 250 125 99% 90% 94% 96% S&P Rated Volume $335 $220 $199 $309 $320 $370 Rated Volume $339 $245 $211 $324 $330 $387 # of Rated Issues 355 608 474 556 531 479 Sources: Thomson Reuters, Standard & Poor s 96% 97%

Standard & Poor s Ratings Services U.S. Municipals (a) $500 375 250 125 91% 89% 88% S&P Rated Volume $410 $416 $285 $348 $290 $287 Rated Volume $451 $468 $324 $401 $338 $326 # of Rated Issues 10,217 12,390 9,021 10,888 9,017 8,787 Sources: Thomson Reuters, Standard & Poor s U.S. Sovereigns $60 87% 86% 88% U.S. Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS) (b) $100 75 50 25 44% 40% 23% 31% S&P Rated Volume $3 $ 7 $ 7 $11 $32 $27 Rated Volume $7 $18 $32 $47 $82 $89 # of Rated Issues 25 41 37 66 107 126 Sources: Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor s (b, e) U.S. Asset-Backed Securities (ABS) $280 25% 39% Data as of January 31, 2015 Percentages calculated based on unrounded figures Notes for debt issuance: (a) Excludes municipal student loans and private placements (b) Excludes confidential transactions (c) Includes Rule 144a (private placements), MTN takedowns, convertibles, and preferred stocks. Excludes private placements (except Rule 144a issues), retail notes, commercial paper, and all agency issues (d) Excludes agency deals. Includes home equity loans (e) Excludes asset-backed commercial paper and letters of credit 45 30 15 95% 94% 94% 95% 94% 85% 210 140 70 86% 77% 62% 68% 68% 71% S&P Rated Volume $49 $40 $37 $29 $34 $32 Rated Volume $51 $42 $39 $31 $36 $37 # of Rated Issues 134 174 110 108 84 96 Sources: Thomson Reuters, Standard & Poor s S&P Rated Volume $124 $100 $ 77 $122 $118 $147 Rated Volume $144 $130 $124 $178 $173 $208 # of Rated Issues 186 244 232 309 304 339 Sources: Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor s (b, d) U.S. Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities (RMBS) $60 U.S. Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs) (b) $140 45 85% 105 30 15 57% 21% 52% S&P Rated Volume $45 $19 $ 3 $11 $18 $16 Rated Volume $53 $33 $15 $22 $30 $30 # of Rated Issues 135 130 48 73 90 93 Sources: Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor s 49% 61% 70 35 63% 97% 93% 53% S&P Rated Volume $4 $29 $24 $53 $70 $70 Rated Volume $6 $30 $26 $54 $89 $133 # of Rated Issues 24 127 78 167 206 285 Sources: Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor s 98% 79% 2015 Investor Fact Book 17

EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Africa) Region Debt Market In 2014, Standard & Poor s rated approximately 80% of the nearly $2 trillion of addressable debt issued in the EMEA market, which includes Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, compared to 84% in 2013. Rated debt issuance by dollar volume in the region rose approximately 4% from 2013 to 2014, while the number of issues decreased by approximately 1%. The rated debt market is a component of the total debt market and includes only the debt securities issued with a rating. The rated EMEA debt market is comprised of six new-issue categories (shown below): (1) Corporates (Industrials and Services); (2) Sovereigns/International Public Finance (IPF); (3) Mortgage-Backed Securities (Residential and Commercial); (4) Asset-Backed Securities; (5) Collateralized Debt Obligations; and (6) Covered Bonds. Rated EMEA Debt Market: (a, b, c, d) 2014 Dollar Volume by New-Issue Category $1.9 trillion Corporates: Industrials $ 476 Corporates: Services $ 638 Sovereigns/IPF $ 529 RMBS $ 58 CMBS $ 4 ABS $ 85 CDOs $ 29 (a, b, c, d) Rated EMEA Debt Market $2,600 1,950 1,300 650 89% 84% EMEA Corporates: Services (b) 78% 82% 84% 80% S&P Rated Volume $2,046 $1,601 $1,493 $1,555 $1,602 $1,585 Rated Volume $2,298 $1,905 $1,915 $1,895 $1,911 $1,983 # of Rated Issues 3,141 3,999 3,857 4,204 4,494 4,403 Sources: Thomson Reuters, Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor's EMEA Corporates: Industrials (b) $640 480 320 160 92% 91% 91% 95% 93% 94% S&P Rated Volume $571 $280 $273 $459 $438 $446 Rated Volume $617 $307 $300 $485 $468 $476 # of Rated Issues 689 465 476 726 692 619 Sources: Thomson Reuters, Standard & Poor's See footnotes on page 19 Notes: Annual figures; dollar volume in billions; data by domicile of issuer/assets Details may not sum to total due to rounding Covered Bonds $ 165 Total $ 1,983 $900 675 450 225 90% 87% 87% 82% 82% S&P Rated Volume $788 $542 $503 $486 $488 $521 Rated Volume $872 $623 $581 $590 $560 $638 # of Rated Issues 1,317 1,779 1,477 1,608 1,899 1,824 Sources: Thomson Reuters, Standard & Poor's 87% 18 McGraw Hill

Standard & Poor s Ratings Services EMEA Sovereigns/International Public Finance (IPF) $600 450 300 150 94% 93% 92% 90% 84% S&P Rated Volume $495 $392 $403 $426 $532 $443 Rated Volume $526 $422 $438 $472 $595 $529 # of Rated Issues 743 968 816 1,159 1,273 1,346 Sources: Thomson Reuters, Standard & Poor's 89% (a, c) EMEA Asset-Backed Securities (ABS) $100 75 50 25 63% 52% 53% S&P Rated Volume $10 $20 $26 $35 $35 $42 Rated Volume $15 $38 $49 $53 $53 $85 # of Rated Issues 42 92 93 95 80 132 Sources: Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor's 66% 65% 49% Data as of January 31, 2015 Percentages calculated based on unrounded figures Notes for debt issuance: (a) Excludes confidential and repo transactions (b) Also includes Rule 144a (private placements), MTN takedowns, convertibles, and preferred stocks. Excludes private placements (except Rule 144a issues), retail notes, and commercial paper (c) Excludes asset-backed commercial paper and letters of credit (d) Includes home equity loans (a, d) EMEA Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities (RMBS) EMEA Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs) (a) $160 120 80 40 74% 74% 75% 59% 47% S&P Rated Volume $ 8 $ 74 $ 89 $35 $13 $28 Rated Volume $11 $101 $119 $60 $26 $58 # of Rated Issues 7 48 46 53 43 66 Sources: Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor's 48% $40 30 20 10 65% 90% 73% 51% S&P Rated Volume $1 $6 $3 $5 $12 $15 Rated Volume $2 $7 $4 $6 $14 $29 # of Rated Issues 9 35 17 25 43 52 Sources: Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor's 83% 83% EMEA Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS) (a) EMEA Covered Bonds (CB) (a) $12 9 6 3 72% 42% 42% 74% S&P Rated Volume $2 $3 $2 $3 $ 4 $2 Rated Volume $2 $6 $4 $4 $10 $4 # of Rated Issues 6 10 3 6 12 9 Sources: Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor's 38% 47% $440 330 220 110 68% 71% 46% 47% 54% S&P Rated Volume $172 $284 $194 $106 $ 81 $ 89 Rated Volume $252 $400 $420 $226 $183 $165 # of Rated Issues 328 602 929 532 452 355 Sources: Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor's 44% 2015 Investor Fact Book 19

Asia-Pacific Region Debt Market (a, b, c, d, e) Rated Asia-Pacific Debt Market In 2014, Standard & Poor s rated approximately 69% of the $557 billion of addressable debt issued in the Asia-Pacific market, compared to 64% in 2013. Rated debt issue volume for corporates in Asia was $379 billion, which is a 15% increase from 2013. Standard & Poor s 2014 market penetration was 78% for corporates, compared to 75% in 2013. For structured finance, rated debt issuance by dollar volume was slightly down compared to 2013, and Standard & Poor s rated approximately 47% of that volume, compared to 54% in 2013. $600 450 300 150 63% 62% 57% 56% 64% 69% The rated debt market is a component of the total debt market and includes only the debt securities issued with a rating. The rated Asia-Pacific debt market is comprised of five new-issue categories (shown below): (1) Corporates (Industrials and Services); (2) Sovereigns/International Public Finance (IPF); (3) Mortgage-Backed Securities (Residential and Commercial); (4) Asset-Backed Securities; and (5) Covered Bonds. Rated Asia-Pacific Debt Market: (a, b, c, d, e) 2014 Dollar Volume by New-Issue Category $400 Asia-Pacific Corporates (Industrials and Services) (b) S&P Rated Volume $249 $230 $227 $276 $321 $384 Rated Volume $396 $374 $396 $494 $504 $557 # of Rated Issues 1,215 1,230 1,165 1,332 1,529 1,583 Sources: Thomson Reuters, Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor's $557 billion Annual figures; dollar volume in billions; data by domicile of issuer/assets Data as of January 31, 2015 Percentages calculated based on unrounded figures Notes for debt issuance: (a) Excludes confidential and repo transactions Corporates: Industrials $ 150 Corporates: Services $ 228 Sovereigns/IPF $ 84 RMBS $ 49 CMBS $ 1 ABS $ 26 Covered Bonds $ 19 Total $ 557 (b) Also includes Rule 144a (private placements), MTN takedowns, convertibles, and preferred stocks. Excludes sovereign issuers, private placements (except Rule 144a issues), retail notes, commercial paper, and all agency issues (c) Excludes asset-backed commercial paper and letters of credit (d) Includes home equity loans (e) Includes sovereigns 300 200 100 68% 69% 66% 73% 78% S&P Rated Volume $182 $161 $144 $228 $248 $294 Rated Volume $267 $235 $219 $312 $329 $379 # of Rated Issues 786 775 666 821 835 857 Sources: Thomson Reuters, Standard & Poor's (a, c, d) Asia-Pacific Structured Finance $120 90 60 30 72% 78% 69% 25% 75% 47% S&P Rated Volume $43 $49 $63 $ 25 $ 54 $45 Rated Volume $59 $62 $93 $100 $100 $95 # of Rated Issues 226 205 241 243 479 466 Sources: Harrison Scott Publications, Standard & Poor's 54% 20 McGraw Hill

Interactive Tools from Standard & Poor s Add Transparency to Its Ratings Process Standard & Poor s Ratings Services Build Credit Scenarios for: Corporates Banks Insurers U.S. Local Governments International Public Finance Project Finance/Infrastructure Credit Scenario Builders Credit Scenario Builders from Standard & Poor s Ratings Services provide the marketplace with interactive tools that bring more transparency into Standard & Poor s ratings process, methodology, and criteria. Standard & Poor s Ratings has expanded this suite of criteria education tools with the launch of Credit Scenario Builders for international public finance and project finance/infrastructure. Nearly 12,500 credit scenarios have been created using these applications since the beginning of 2015. Users of Credit Scenario Builders can: Interact with Standard & Poor s Ratings Framework Design, create, save, and compare illustrative issuer credit-rating scenarios based on their own parameters and adjustments as well as Standard & Poor s Ratings rating methodology and assumptions Understand the analyst-adjusted data that factor into Standard & Poor s credit analysis www.spratings.com Available in the free S&P Ratings ipad app Project Finance Ratings Scenario Builder Bank Credit Scenario Builder Create scenarios based on user inputs and Standard & Poor s credit ratings framework Credit Scenario Builder ratings are for illustration purposes only 2015 Investor Fact Book 21

Global Infrastructure Investment Supporting Economic Growth through Infrastructure Investment While the efficient movement of goods and people can go virtually unnoticed by the general public, the development of infrastructure in cities across the world is critical to encourage economic growth and enhance general social well-being. As such, a key issue for governments and policymakers is to secure the annual funding needed to support the global infrastructure sector currently in the tens of trillions of dollars. Government funding constraints have limited public investment in recent years; however, the private sector is increasingly willing to construct, lease, operate, and maintain infrastructure assets from airports and toll roads to power plants and schools. Due to the long-lived nature of these assets, debt capital plays an important role in financing infrastructure. Standard & Poor s research shows that institutional investors such as infrastructure funds, insurance companies, pension funds, and sovereign wealth funds have a collective demand for infrastructure debt. S&P s global team can provide the extensive expertise needed to evaluate the broad array of asset types and ownership structures, as well as the financing techniques utilized to fund them. Financing Constraints are Shifting the Source of Infrastructure Investment from Public Government funding Rating Infrastructure Debt: Types of Criteria Construction Risk Operations Risk Transaction Structure Risk Counterparty Risk Global infrastructure investment needs are now in the tens of trillions of dollars to Private Institutional investors including infrastructure funds, insurance companies, pension funds, and sovereign wealth funds The multiplier effect of a 1% spending increase of real GDP on infrastructure can be as high as 2.5x in a three-year period The Effects of an Increase in Spending of 1% of GDP (Ranked by multiplier effect, highest to lowest) Estimated Projected job multiplier effect gains (maximum Country (2015 2017) above baseline) U.K. 2.5x 343,000 Brazil 2.5x 418,000 China 2.2x 2,400,000 India 2.0x 1,360,000 Argentina 1.8x 68,000 U.S. 1.7x 730,000 Japan 1.5x 211,000 Canada 1.4x 61,000 Eurozone 1.4x 627,000 Italy 1.4x 136,000 France 1.3x 109,000 Mexico 1.3x 193,000 South Korea 1.3x 95,400 Germany 1.2x 157,000 Indonesia 1.0x 320,000 Australia 1.0x 38,680 Standard & Poor s sees clear economic benefits to G20 countries increased public spending on infrastructure 22 McGraw Hill Note: Most of the results in this table are from Standard & Poor s simulations for an increase in infrastructure investment of 1% of GDP in year one, using Oxford Economics Global Economic Model. However, for projected job gains in emerging regions, Standard & Poor s used the empirically based rule known as Okun s Law, which states that unemployment falls by 1% when GDP rises by 3%. Specifically, Standard & Poor s used this for Asia-Pacific (Australia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, and South Korea) and Latin America (Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico) since the structure of the labor markets in these regions typically differs significantly and renders most general equilibrium modeling techniques less useful. Source: Standard & Poor s Ratings Services CreditWeek, Global Infrastructure Investment: Timing is Everything, January 21, 2015

Standard & Poor s Ratings Services Latin America s infrastructure lags that of other G20 nations Latin America: Total Spending on Infrastructure: Cross-Country Comparison (% of GDP) 6.0% While in Asia Pacific, funding needs are immense and investor interest is high Asia-Pacific: Estimated Real GDP Impact of a 1% Increase in Public Investment (% deviation from baseline) 1.5% 4.5 1.0 3.0 1.5 80s 90s 00s 80s 90s 00s 80s 90s 00s 80s 90s 00s 80s 90s 00s 80s 90s 00s Argentina Public Private Brazil Chile Colombia Mexico Peru Source: Standard & Poor's calculations based on data from World Bank and United Nation's ECLAC (Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean) 0.5 0 Australia China India Indonesia Japan South Korea 2015 2016 2017 Source: Standard & Poor s The EU s recent public funding constraints have acted as a barrier to increased private financing Investment in the EU: Public and Private Financing (% of GDP) 22.0%...But new infrastructure stimulus packages are now taking shape to revive economic growth EU: Anticipated Investments by Sector (2015 2017) (Euros in billions) Transport: 29% U.S. annual infrastructure spending should exceed $1 trillion by 2025, but it will lag behind China, which is expected to be 3x as high U.S. Infrastructure Spending by Broad Sector ($billions per year, current prices) $1,200 16.5 11.0 5.5 315 billion Energy Union: 29% Knowledge, Innovation, and the Digital Economy: 18% Social Infrastructure: 15% 900 600 300 Social Transport Manufacturing Utilities including Powergen and telecoms Extraction Resources and Environment: 9% 04 05 06 07 08 09 Public Private Total Sources: European Commission, OECD, and Standard & Poor s estimates 10 11 12 13 Source: European Commission 1995 2005 2015 2025 Sources: PwC s Capital project and infrastructure spending: Outlook to 2025 and Oxford Economics PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP ( PwC ). Not for further use or distribution without the permission of PwC. 2015 Investor Fact Book 23